A-10 pilots, Army brigade combat teams train at Green Flag 17-03

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Ryan Callaghan
  • 23d Wing Public Affairs

NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. - Pilots from the 74th Fighter Squadron prepared for future deployments while participating in Green Flag-West 17-03, Jan. 13 - 27, at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev.

 

GFW is an air-land integration exercise that gives Air Force pilots a chance to conduct realistic close air support in a joint training environment which is designed to mirror the current conditions present in overseas contingency operations.

 

“Green Flag is a big exercise where we get to train with a lot of Army assets that we don't normally work with,” said U.S. Air Force Maj. Michael Dumas, 23d Fighter Group chief of standards and evaluation. “We’re supporting an entire brigade combat team, more than 4,500 guys, and being involved in that kind of large force exercise is really great training for us. It’s especially important for our younger guys who have never been exposed to this kind of integration.”

 

U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Kyle Singletary, an A-10C Thunderbolt II pilot from the 74th fighter squadron, is on his first large scale exercise with the squadron.

 

“I think Green Flag is preparing us well because we get to see what the Army would actually look like on the ground in a deployed environment,” Singletary said. “We get to see what close air support is supposed to be doing in a large-scale battle and the associated difficulties that come along with it, like battle tracking, finding targets and flying alongside artillery fire.

 

“These are the scenarios we try to simulate back home in our training,” Singletary continued. “So the main difference, and the real benefit of coming out here, is that it’s all real.”

 

An added benefit of the realism inherent with an exercise this size is an extra challenge called battle tracking, keeping track of the targets as they move and react to friendly force movements.

 

“It’s a pretty cool problem to have because it’s very difficult for us to simulate back home,” Dumas explained. “It’s the same training every day, so we all know where the targets are. Here, theres a bunch of stuff on the ground and you don’t always know what it is. Providing close are support while working through the uncertainty of finding the the friendlies to protect and the targets to kill is really important practice for when we go to support Operation Inherent Resolve.”

 

The friendly forces and targets alike are on the ground at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California where the Army conducts pre-deployment certification training and according to U.S. Army Capt. Zachary Busenbark, 357th Ground Liaison Detachment, 4th Battlefield Coordination Detachment ground liaison officer, realism is the name of the game.

 

“The entire purpose of the NTC is to make training as realistic as possible,” Busenbark said. “It tests all of the ground commander’s systems: maneuver, artillery, infantry, tanks, the cooks, the intel guys … everyones’ getting a piece of the training. Bringing in the A-10s to support just absolutely adds the element of authenticity.

 

“Real CAS is tangible,” Busenbark said. “I think that’s why its vital to have these assets out here.”

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